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American Primeval: Best Taylor Kitsch Movies And Shows, Ranked

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american primeval best taylor kitsch movies and shows ranked


While he may not be a top-class celebrity or box office star, Canadian actor Taylor Kitsch is known for a variety of roles in movies and TV series. Whether Kitsch is cast in a lead or supporting role, his performances always manage to become the center of attention and leave a lasting impression.

Most associated with the military or criminal action genre, several of Taylor Kitsch’s characters are connected to the Navy or police services. The actor is capable of taking on physically demanding roles while delivering believable and nuanced dramatic performances. He often portrays active or former officers struggling with their troubled past or uncertainties about the future. Kitsch is one of director Peter Berg’s most frequently cast actors, alongside Mark Wahlberg.

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Kitsch’s latest role as mountain man Isaac Reed, raised by the Shoshone tribe in Netflix’s American Primeval series, is one of the standouts of his career so far, blending raw physicality with subtle emotion. However, there’s much more to his talent.

8

John Carter

Captain John Carter

  • IMDB: 6.6
  • Runtime: 2h 12m
  • Director: Andrew Stanton

John Carter comes from a brief era when Taylor Kitsch was being positioned as a rising blockbuster star. However, after both John Carter and Battleship flopped, the actor was no longer seen as a major box office draw, leading him to shift more toward TV projects and smaller-scale films. Nevertheless, his role as the titular Confederate Army captain, John Carter, is one of the film’s stronger aspects — aside from the giant White Apes scenes, of course.

Based on A Princess of Mars, the first book in the Barsoom series by Edgar Rice Burroughs, John Carter is a typical big-budget epic adventure, rooted in nostalgia and retro aesthetics in its portrayal of Mars and its inhabitants. It’s enjoyable enough, but nothing groundbreaking. Taylor Kitsch bears a strong resemblance to the Prince of Persia character, thanks to his signature open armor and sky-high jumps and low-gravity acrobatics.

7

The Terminal List

Operative Ben Edwards

  • IMDB: 7.9
  • Runtime: 8 episodes, 55m
  • Creators: Jack Carr, David DiGilio

TV shows are where Taylor Kitsch truly shines. Playing a familiar archetype — the former Navy SEAL turned CIA Ground Branch operative Ben Edwards — the actor uses the extended screen time in Prime’s The Terminal List to explore the character’s darker psychological depths. Based on Jack Carr’s novel, this classic revenge story/conspiracy thriller hits all the right notes, anchored by the strong duo of Chris Pratt and Taylor Kitsch.

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While slightly overcooked and stretched out, the show isn’t made for critics. Instead, it delivers a twisty plot, intense action, and layered characters, catering to fans of the action-drama genre dominated by hits like Reacher and Jack Ryan.

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6

Only The Brave

Firefighter Christopher MacKenzie

  • IMDB: 7.6
  • Runtime: 2h 14m
  • Director: Joseph Kosinski

A stark contrast to the flashy Savages, Only the Brave is a grounded biographical drama about the tragic fate of the Granite Mountain Hotshots firefighters. Taylor Kitsch plays seasonal firefighter Christopher MacKenzie, who, along with 18 out of 20 crew members, lost his life while battling the Yarnell Hill Fire in June 2013. The film is dedicated to the fallen firefighters and their families.

The movie was praised for its strong performances. Even among heavyweights like Josh Brolin and Jeff Bridges, Taylor Kitsch manages to stand out with a convincing portrayal in his supportive role. While this performance leans more on the physical side rather than deep psychological exploration, Kitsch delivers it masterfully.

5

Savages

John “Chon” McAllister

  • IMDB: 6.4
  • Runtime: 2h 11m
  • Director: Oliver Stone

Based on Don Winslow’s novel, Oliver Stone’s crime thriller Savages is an underrated film. A dazzling, high-energy cocktail brought to life by Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Blake Lively, and Taylor Kitsch, whose characters share great chemistry, Savages is violent and gripping enough to keep audiences on edge throughout.

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Kitsch’s character, former Navy SEAL John “Chon” McAllister Jr., plays a central role, particularly in the film’s intense action sequences. Despite its bursts of violence, Savages remains a grounded thriller, exploring the complexities of negotiation. The leads’ dynamic feels not just credible, but lived-in and authentic.

4

Lone Survivor

Officer Michael Murphy

  • IMDB: 7.5
  • Runtime: 2h 1m
  • Director: Peter Berg

Bringing together Mark Wahlberg and Taylor Kitsch for this military action drama set during the war in Afghanistan, director Peter Berg goes all in with Lone Survivor, based on the 2007 nonfiction book by Marcus Luttrell and Patrick Robinson. In another physically demanding role, Kitsch plays Navy SEAL officer Michael Murphy, who endures unimaginable hardship alongside his team.

The film dramatizes the ill-fated U.S. counter-insurgent mission, Operation Red Wings. Praised for its direction and realism, Lone Survivor leans more toward action than deep characterization, yet it delivers an intense, immersive ride where every actor is equally compelling. The film’s raw depiction of courage and survival remains gripping, even despite some historical inaccuracies.

3

Waco

Cult Leader David Koresh

  • IMDB: 7.8
  • Runtime: 6 episodes, 50m
  • Creators: Drew Dowdle, John Erick Dowdle

One of Taylor Kitsch’s most fascinating and transformative roles to date, his portrayal of cult leader David Koresh in Paramount’s Waco is on another level. Kitsch embodied the real-life figure, delivering an almost unrecognizable, thinner appearance and meticulously mimicking Koresh’s voice for a convincing performance.

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Waco dramatizes the infamous 51-day standoff in 1993 between the FBI, ATF, and Koresh’s religious faction, the Branch Davidians, in Waco, Texas. By exploring the tragedy from multiple perspectives on both sides of the conflict, the series delivers an engrossing and nuanced retelling. Michael Shannon and Taylor Kitsch’s performances stand out as the highlights of this gripping police procedural miniseries.

2

American Primeval

Isaac Reed/Spotted Hawk

  • IMDB: 8.1
  • Runtime: 6 episodes, 50m
  • Creators: Mark L. Smith, Peter Berg

The most recent collaboration between Taylor Kitsch and Peter Berg, Netflix’s American Primeval, is an ambitious, brutal, and uncompromising Western drama centered on the real events surrounding the Mountain Meadows Massacre. Set in 1857 during the Utah War, one arc of the narrative follows skilled mountain man Isaac Reed, who was raised by the Shoshone and is haunted by personal struggles and losses. He soon finds himself protecting a mother and son as they attempt to cross the country while being pursued by bounty hunters.

Grim and brutal, American Primeval is yet another showcase of Kitsch’s physicality and subtle performance, as his character is traditionally laconic and hardened. The frequent, gory action sequences make the rare moments where his personality and emotions surface even more effective.

1

True Detective Season Two

Officer Paul Woodrugh

  • IMDB: 7.8 (season two on average)
  • Runtime: 8 episodes, 1h
  • Creator: Nic Pizzolatto

Despite some later resurgence, True Detective Season Two remains underappreciated by fans of the first season, who expected more of the same. Instead, they got a blend of police procedural, melancholic noir aesthetics, deep metaphors, a layered non-linear narrative with largely separate arcs, and groundbreaking performances.

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In many ways, the show was pivotal for Taylor Kitsch, whose portrayal of officer Paul Woodrugh showcased his true potential in playing complex, flawed characters. Struggling between two different worlds, Woodrugh lives in constant fear and vulnerability. He is shaped by his mother’s disappointment and shame, while trying to maintain the facade of a tough cop and military veteran. Kitsch delivered this challenging role with incredible believability, proving he was more than ready to move beyond the one-dimensional blockbuster characters he was typically cast for.

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